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Ka_Jun
02-29-08, 09:08 AM
http://www.americanprofile.com/heroes/article/25661.html

Crusading for Bike Safety
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comment on this story by Sheryl Kayne
For kids on bicycles, riding the streets is a lot safer than it used to be in Stamford, Conn., thanks to Glenn and Peggy Coppola.
Since 1995, the Coppolas have given away more than 24,000 free bicycle helmets to local children. The couple’s mission was launched after their only child, 8-year-old Timothy, collided on a bicycle with a neighbor’s car in a cul-de-sac only 100 feet away from his home. Timothy, on his friend’s bike without his helmet, suffered a permanent brain injury and died 22 months later.

“It’s the only time we can ever recall him riding without a helmet,” says Peggy Coppola, 62, who started the annual helmet giveaway with her husband, Glenn, the year after Timothy’s death. Glenn, 55, a 30-year-veteran of the Stamford police department, enlisted the help of his fellow officers for the project.

“We’ve been partners right from the beginning,” says Joe Kennedy, president of the Stamford Police Association, which provides volunteers and donates about half the costs of purchasing helmets for the Timothy Coppola Memorial Bicycle Helmet Giveaway.

“Research has proven that wearing a helmet can reduce the risk of a head injury by 85 percent,” says Kathy Hoffman, bicycle safety coordinator for Bell Sports, a leading manufacturer of biking helmets.

The helmet giveaway is held each year just prior to Mother’s Day, “to direct public awareness to the importance of wearing bike helmets as the biking season begins,” says Peggy, who recently retired after working for 38 years as a registered nurse. This year’s event is scheduled May 3 at Stamford Hospital’s Tully Health Center, where hundreds of kids and young teens will line up to choose helmets and be measured for a proper fit.

The Coppolas have transformed the heartache of their own loss into a joyous event for the entire community. “So many people have participated right from the very beginning,” says Mary Maher, 64, Peggy’s sister and fellow Stamford resident. “The police officers do the hardest work—setting up, unpacking 2,000 helmets, and then breaking it down. Everyone does whatever’s needed, from crowd control to measuring heads.”

“Each child’s head is measured with a piece of string,” explains Peggy. “They’re then given a piece of paper with the size before moving on to the helmet display of styles and colors.” Once a helmet is selected, volunteers create a custom fit with Velcro pads and make final adjustments. Afterward, everyone picks up free bike-safety handouts, coloring books, yo-yos, drinks, snacks and other giveaways.

“I organize the snacks and hand them out to everybody,” says Quinn Foley, 13, of nearby Fairfield, who’s been a volunteer since she was 6. Working the event over the years has had a profound effect on Quinn and her friends, especially when they ride their bikes. “We always wear our helmets,” she says.

Stamford Elks Lodge 899 and local businesses donate money to buy helmets, office supplies, doughnuts, deli lunches, snacks and T-shirts for volunteers. Regional newspapers and radio and television stations carry stories. Some 10,000 flyers are distributed to Stamford middle and elementary schools and youth centers.

“About 120 volunteers are needed for the different stations,” says Melodye Colucci-Stackpole, 39, of nearby Fairfield, who first volunteered for a giveaway eight years ago and has participated each year since. “Peggy and Glenn have such a passion for this, working with them makes you develop that passion, too.”

The Coppolas have been honored and recognized over the years with awards, citations and badges from the mayor, governor and police association. But “the real reward,” Glenn says, “is hearing back from very grateful parents whose children had accidents and were wearing a helmet.”

“Because of Timmy and the program,” adds Peggy, “we know that we have saved at least one child. And even if it was only one child, it was worth it.”

Sheryl Kayne is a freelance writer living in Weston, Conn.

closetbiker
02-29-08, 09:14 AM
If they really cared for kids, they'd get drivers to drive better, parents to pay closer attention to their kids and police to actually enforce traffic law.

noisebeam
02-29-08, 09:17 AM
They should give away helmets to BF members so we don't hurt ourselves when banging our heads on the table when stories like this are published.

Al

closetbiker
02-29-08, 09:25 AM
funny how Bell Sports is tied up in this huh?

genec
02-29-08, 09:40 AM
They should give away helmets to BF members so we don't hurt ourselves when banging our heads on the table when stories like this are published.

Al

:D LOL gotta agree... as if helmets make cycling "safer." :rolleyes:

And of course there are what 24000 kids out there riding without the benefit of any sort of instruction.

Oh dear... call the "VC police..." that's gonna take a lot of LCIs doing a lot of "tupperware parties" to "assimilate" that many cyclists.

I wonder how many LCIs are in Stamford, Conn.

noisebeam
02-29-08, 11:06 AM
I think its fine to give out helmets to young kids and encourage their use. Young kids are far more likely to fall, crash into other kids while playing, etc. and helmets help for these type of near zero speed falls and bumps.

But this should not be promoted as improving cycling with traffic safety as said in the story: "For kids on bicycles, riding the streets is a lot safer than it used to be"

I also wonder about the lead example story. Did the car collide with the kid or did the kid collide with the car and was the car moving or parked?

Al

JusticeZero
02-29-08, 03:47 PM
No complaints here. Helmets are a good thing to wear. It just isn't "safety"; i'd rather see a giveaway of reflective vests, like i'm planning to do for possible bike commuters here.

closetbiker
02-29-08, 03:59 PM
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2239/2234848023_d186297832_o.jpg

Ed Holland
02-29-08, 04:04 PM
Oh dear...

invisiblehand
02-29-08, 04:10 PM
I think that we should write a law that says everyone should wear a motorcycle helmet ... always. Think of the plastic surgery and makeup saved!

-G

UmneyDurak
02-29-08, 04:19 PM
Helmet != Bike safety. It's just small, small, very small part of it.

Ed Holland
02-29-08, 04:19 PM
I've seen people who should definitely wear a motorcycle helmet all the time. Not just for their safety either.

atbman
03-02-08, 08:58 AM
60% of the UK hospital A & E visits for head injuries are by people with alcohol in their bloodstream.

Please don't go to a party or a bar without wearing your helmet

closetbiker
03-02-08, 09:22 AM
Research has proven that wearing a helmet can reduce the risk of a head injury by 85 percent

A good litmus test of any helmet argument is: if they uncritically quote 85% effectiveness, engage suspicion mode immediately


http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk/wiki/Cycle_helmet_debate